Tuesday, April 21, 2009

The Thing from Inner Space

[Reader-list] Zizek on Tarkovskyabir bazaz abirbazaz at rediffmail.com Tue Nov 27 22:30:33 IST 2001
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There's been some discussion on art on the List.I thought this article by Zizek might be relevant.Here is hoping this to stimulate more discussion:


The Thing from Inner Space


by Slavoj Zizek


JACQUES LACAN DEFINES ART itself with regard to the Thing: in his Seminar on the Ethics of Psychoanalysis, he claims that art as such is always organized around the central Void of the impossible-real Thing - a statement which, perhaps, should be read as a variation on Rilke's old thesis that "Beauty is the last veil that covers the Horrible" (1). Lacan gives some hints about how this surrounding of the Void functions in the visual arts and in architecture; what we shall do here is not provide an account of how, in cinematic art, the field of the visible, of representations, involves reference to some central and structural Void, to the impossibility attached to it - ultimately, therein resides the point of the notion of suture in cinema theory. What I propose to do is something much more naive and abrupt: to analyze the way the motif of the Thing appears within the diegetic space of cinematic narrative - in short, to speak about films whose narrative deals with some impossible/traumatic Thing, like the Alien Thing in science-fiction horror films.
What better proof of the fact that this Thing comes from Inner Space than the very first scene of Star Wars? At first, all we see is the void - the infinite dark sky, the ominously silent abyss of the universe, with dispersed twinkling stars which are not so much material objects as abstract points, markers of space coordinates, virtual objects; then, all of a sudden, in Dolby stereo, we hear a thundering sound coming from behind our backs, from our innermost background, later rejoined by the visual object, the source of this sound - a gigantic space ship, a kind of space version of Titanic - which triumphantly enters the frame of screen-reality. The object-Thing is thus clearly rendered as a part of ourselves that we eject into reality... This intrusion of the m
seems to bring relief, canceling the horror vacui of staring at the infinite void of the universe - however, what if its actual effect is the exact opposite? What if the true horror is that of Something - the intrusion of some excessive massive Real - where we expect Nothing? This experience of "Something (the stain of the Real) instead of Nothing" is perhaps at the root of the metaphysical question "Why is there something instead of nothing?"
I want to focus on the specific version of this Thing: the Thing as the Space (the sacred/forbidden Zone) in which the gap between the Symbolic and the Real is closed, i.e. in which, to put it somewhat bluntly, our desires are directly materialized (or, to put it in the precise terms of Kant's transcendental idealism, the Zone in which our intuition becomes directly productive - the state of things which, according to Kant, characterizes only infinite divine Reason).
This notion of Thing as an Id-Machine, a mechanism that directly materializes our unacknowledged fantasies, possesses a long, if not always respectable, pedigree. In cinema, it all began with Fred Wilcox's The Forbidden Planet (1956), which transposed onto a distant planet the story-skeleton of Shakespeare's The Tempest: a father living alone with his daughter (who has never met another man) on an island have their peace disturbed by the arrival of a group of space-travelers. Strange attacks by an invisible monster soon start to occur, and, at the film's end, it becomes clear that this monster is nothing but the materialization of the father's destructive impulses against the intruders who disturbed his incestuous peace. (Retroactively, we can thus read the tempest itself from Shakespeare's play as the materialization of the raging of the paternal superego...). The Id-Machine that, unbeknownst to the father, generates the destructive monster is a gigantic mechanism beneath the surface of this distant planet, the mysterious remnants of some past civilization that succeeded in developing such a machine f
oughts and thus destroyed itself... Here, the Id-Machine is firmly set in a Freudian libidinal context: the monsters it generates are the realizations of the primordial father's incestuous destructive impulses against other men who might threaten his symbiosis with the daughter.
The ultimate variation of this motif of the Id-Machine is arguably Andrei Tarkovsky's Solaris, based on Stanislaw Lem's novel, in which this Thing is also related to the deadlocks of sexual relationship. Solaris is the story of a space agency psychologist, Kelvin, sent to a half-abandoned spaceship above a newly-discovered planet, Solaris, where, recently, strange things have been taking place (scientists going mad, hallucinating and killing themselves). Solaris is a planet with an oceanic fluid surface which moves incessantly and, from time to time, imitates recognizable forms, not only elaborate geometric structures, but also gigantic children's bodies or human buildings; although all attempts to communicate with the planet fail, scientists entertain the hypothesis that Solaris is a gigantic brain which somehow reads our minds. Soon after his arrival, Kelvin finds at his side in his bed his dead wife, Harey, who, years ago on Earth, killed herself after he had abandoned her. He is unable to shake Harey off, all attempts to get rid of her miserably fail (after he sends her into space with a rocket, she rematerializes the next day); analysis of her tissue demonstrates that she is not composed of atoms like normal human beings - beneath a certain micro-level, there is nothing, just void. Finally, Kelvin grasps that Harey is a materialization of his own innermost traumatic fantasies. This accounts for the enigma of strange gaps in Harey's memory - of course she doesn't know everything a real person is supposed to know, because she is not such a person, but a mere materialization of HIS fantasmatic image of her in all its inconsistency. The problem is that, precisely because Harey has no substantial identity of her own, she acquires the
returns to its place: like fire in Lynch's films, she forever "walks with the hero", sticks to him, never lets him go. Harey, this fragile specter, pure semblance, cannot ever be erased - she is "undead", eternally recurring in the space between the two deaths. Are we thus not back at the standard Weiningerian anti-feminist notion of the woman as a symptom of man, a materialization of his guilt, his fall into sin, who can only deliver him (and herself) by her suicide? Solaris relies on science-fiction rules to enact in reality itself, to present as a material fact, the notion that woman merely materializes a male fantasy: the tragic position of Harey is that she becomes aware that she is deprived of all substantial identity, that she is Nothing in herself, since she only exists as the Other's dream, insofar as the Other's fantasies turn around her - it is this predicament that imposes suicide as her ultimate ethical act: becoming aware of how he suffers on account of her permanent presence, Harey finally destroys herself by swallowing a chemical stuff that will prevent her recomposition. (The ultimate horror scene of the movie takes place when the spectral Harey reawakens from her first failed suicide attempt on Solaris: after ingesting liquid oxygen, she lies on the floor, deeply frozen; then, all of a sudden, she starts to move, her body twitching in a mixture of erotic beauty and abject horror, sustaining unbearable pain - is there anything more tragic than such a scene of failed self-erasure, when we are reduced to the obscene slime which, against our will, persists in the picture?) At the novel's end, we see Kelvin alone on the spaceship, staring into the mysterious surface of the Solaris ocean...
In her reading of the Hegelian dialectics of Lord and Bondsman, Judith Butler focuses on the hidden contract between the two: "the imperative to the bondsman consists in the following formulation: you be my body for me, but do not let me know that the body that you are is my body".(2) The disavowal on the part
disavows his own body, he postures as a disembodied desire and compels the bondsman to act as his body; secondly, the bondsman has to disavow that he acts merely as the Lord's body and act as an autonomous agent, as if the bondsman's bodily laboring for the lord is not imposed on him but is his autonomous activity. This structure of double (and thereby self-effacing) disavowal also reveals the patriarchal matrix of the relationship between man and woman: in a first move, woman is posited as a mere projection/reflection of man, his insubstantial shadow, hysterically imitating but never able really to acquire the moral stature of a fully constituted self-identical subjectivity; however, this status of a mere reflection itself has to be disavowed and the woman provided with a false autonomy, as if she acts the way she does within the logic of patriarchy on account of her own autonomous logic (women are "by nature" submissive, compassionate, self-sacrificing...). The paradox not to be missed here is that the bondsman (servant) is all the more the servant, the more he (mis)perceives his position as that of an autonomous agent; and the same goes for woman - the ultimate form of her servitude is to (mis)perceive herself, when she acts in a "feminine" submissive-compassionate way, as an autonomous agent. For that reason, the Weiningerian ontological denigration of woman as a mere "symptom" of man - as the embodiment of male fantasy, as the hysterical imitation of true male subjectivity - is, when openly admitted and fully assumed, far more subversive than the false direct assertion of feminine autonomy - perhaps, the ultimate feminist statement is to proclaim openly "I do not exist in myself, I am merely the Other's fantasy embodied"...
What we have in are thus Harey's TWO suicides: the first one (in her earlier earthly "real" existence, as Kelvin's wife), and then her second suicide, the heroic act of the self-erasure of her very spectral undead existence: while the first suicidal act was a simple escape from the bu
act. In other words, if the first Harey, before her suicide on Earth, was a "normal human being", the second one is a Subject in the most radical sense of the term, precisely insofar as she is deprived of the last vestiges of her substantial identity (as she says in the film: "No, it's not me... It's not me... I'm not Harey. /.../ Tell me... tell me... Do you find me disgusting because of what I am?"). The difference between Harey who appears to Kelvin and the "monstrous Aphrodite" who appears to Gibarian, one of Kelvin's colleagues on the spaceship (in the novel, not in the film: in the film, Tarkovsky replaced her by a small innocent blonde girl), is that Gibarian's apparition does not come from "real life" memory, but from pure fantasy: "A giant Negress was coming silently towards me with a smooth, rolling gait. I caught a gleam from the whites of her eyes and heard the soft slapping of her bare feet. She was wearing nothing but a yellow skirt of plaited straw; her enormous breasts swung freely and her black arms were as thick as thighs".(3) Unable to sustain confrontation with his primordial maternal fantasmatic apparition, Gibarian dies of shame.
Is the planet around which the story turns, composed of the mysterious matter which seems to think, i.e. which in a way is the direct materialization of Thought itself, not an exemplary case of the Lacanian Thing as the "Obscene Jelly" (4), the traumatic Real, the point at which symbolic distance collapses, the point at which there is no need for speech, for signs, since, in it, thought directly intervenes in the Real? This gigantic Brain, this Other-Thing, involves a kind of psychotic short-circuit: in short-circuiting the dialectic of question and answer, of demand and its satisfaction, it provides - or, rather, imposes on us - the answer before we even raise the question, directly materializing our innermost fantasies which support our desire. Solaris is a machine that generates/materializes, in reality itself, my ultimate fantasmatic objectal supplement/par
n reality, although my entire psychic life turns around it.
Jacques-Alain Miller (5) draws the distinction between the woman who assumes her non-existence, her constitutive lack ("castration"), i.e. the void of subjectivity in her very heart, and what he calls la femme à postiche, the fake, phony woman. This femme à postiche is not what commonsense conservative wisdom would tell us (a woman who distrusts her natural charm and abandons her vocation of rearing children, serving her husband, taking care of the household, etc., and indulges in the extravaganzas of fashionable dressing and make-up, of decadent promiscuity, of career, etc.), but almost its exact opposite: the woman who takes refuge from the void in the very heart of her subjectivity, from the "not-having-it" which marks her being, in the phony certitude of "having it" (of serving as the stable support of family life, of rearing children, her true possession, etc.) - this woman gives the impression (and has the false satisfaction) of a firmly anchored being, of a self-enclosed, satisfied circuit of everyday life (her man has to run around wildly, while she leads a calm life and serves as the safe protective rock or save haven to which her man can always return...). (The most elementary form of "having it" for a woman is, of course, having a child, which is why, for Lacan, there is an ultimate antagonism between Woman and Mother: in contrast to woman who "n'existe pas", mother definitely does exist). The interesting feature to be noted here is that, contrary to the commonsensical expectation, it is the woman who "has it", the self-satisfied femme à postiche disavowing her lack, who not only does not pose any threat to the patriarchal male identity, but even serves as its protective shield and support, while, in contrast to her, it is the woman who flaunts her lack ("castration"), who poses as a hysterical composite of semblances covering a Void, who poses a serious threat to male identity. In other words, the paradox is that the more the woman is den
nd insubstantial composite of semblances around a Void, the more she threatens the firm male substantial self-identity (Otto Weininger's entire work centers on this paradox); and, on the other hand, the more the woman is a firm, self-enclosed Substance, the more she supports male identity.
This opposition, a key constituent of Tarkovsky's universe, finds its clearest expression in his Nostalgia, whose hero, the Russian writer wandering around northern Italy in search of manuscripts of a 19th-century Russian composer who lived there, is split between Eugenia, the hysterical woman, a being-of-lack trying desperately to seduce him in order to get sexual satisfaction, and his memory of the maternal figure of the Russian wife he has left behind. Tarkovsky's universe is intensely male-centered, oriented on the opposition woman/mother: the sexually active, provocative woman (whose attraction is signaled by a series of coded signals, like the dispersed long hair of Eugenia in Nostalgia) is rejected as an inauthentic hysterical creature, and contrasted to the maternal figure with closely knit and kept hair. For Tarkovsky, the moment a woman accepts the role of being sexually desirable, she sacrifices what is most precious in her, the spiritual essence of her being, and thus devalues herself, turning into a sterile mode of existence: Tarkovsky's universe is permeated by a barely concealed disgust for a provocative woman; to this figure, prone to hysterical incertitudes, he prefers the mother's assuring and stable presence. This disgust is clearly discernible in the hero's (and director's) attitude towards Eugenia's long, hysterical outburst of accusations against him which precedes her act of abandoning him.
It is against this background that one should account for Tarkovsky's recourse to static long shots (or shots which allow only a slow panning or tracking movement); these shots can work in two opposite ways, both of them exemplarily at work in Nostalgia: they either rely on a harmonious relationship with their
iritual Reconciliation found not in Elevation from the gravitational force of the Earth but in a full surrender to its inertia (like the longest shot in Tarkovsky's entire opus, the Russian hero's extremely slow passage through the empty cracked pool with a lit candle as the path to his salvation; significantly, at the end, when, after a failed attempt, he does reach the other border of the pool, he collapses in death, fully satisfied and reconciled), or, even more interestingly, they rely on a contrast between form and content, like the long shot of Eugenia's hysterical outburst against the hero, a mixture of sexually provocative seductive gestures with contemptuous dismissing remarks. In this shot, it is as if Eugenia protests not only against the hero's tired indifference, but, in a way, also against the calm indifference of the long static shot itself which does not let itself be disturbed by her outburst - Tarkovsky is here at the very opposite extreme to Cassavetes, in whose masterpieces the (feminine) hysterical outbursts are shot by a hand-held camera from an over-proximity, as if the camera itself was drawn into the dynamic hysterical outburst, strangely deforming the enraged faces and thereby losing the stability of its own point-of-view...
Solaris nonetheless supplements this standard, although disavowed, male scenario with a key feature: this structure of woman as a symptom of man can be operative only insofar as the man is confronted with his Other Thing, a decentered opaque machine which "reads" his deepest dreams and returns them to him as his symptom, as his own message in its true form that the subject is not ready to acknowledge. It is here that one should reject the Jungian reading of Solaris: the point of Solaris is not simply projection, materialization of the (male) subject's disavowed inner impetuses; what is much more crucial is that if this "projection" is to take place, the impenetrable Other Thing must already be here - the true enigma is the presence of this Thing. The problem with
s for the Jungian reading, according to which the external journey is merely the externalization and/or projection of the inner journey into the depth of one's psyche. Apropos of Solaris, he stated in an interview: "Maybe, effectively, the mission of Kelvin on Solaris has only one goal: to show that love of the other is indispensable to all life. A man without love is no longer a man. . . . "(6) In clear contrast to this, Lem's novel focuses on the inert external presence of the planet Solaris, of this "Thing which thinks" (to use Kant's expression, which is fully appropriate here): the point of the novel is precisely that Solaris remains an impenetrable Other with no possible communication with us - true, it returns us to our innermost disavowed fantasies, but the "Que vuoi?" beneath this act remains thoroughly impenetrable (Why does It do it? As a purely mechanical response? To play demonic games with us? To help us - or compel us - to confront our disavowed truth?). It would thus be interesting to put Tarkovsky in the series of Hollywood commercial rewritings of novels which have served as the base for a movie: Tarkovsky does exactly the same as the lowest Hollywood producer, reinscribing the enigmatic encounter with Otherness into the framework of the production of the couple...
Nowhere is this gap between the novel and the film more perceptible than in their different endings: at the novel's end, we see Kelvin alone on the spaceship, staring into the mysterious surface of the Solaris ocean, while the film ends with the archetypal Tarkovskian fantasy of combining within the same shot the Otherness into which the hero is thrown (the chaotic surface of Solaris) and the object of his nostalgic longing, the home dacha (Russian wooden countryhouse) to which he longs to return, the house whose contours are encircled by the malleable slime of Solaris' surface - within the radical Otherness, we discover the lost object of our innermost longing. More precisely, the sequence is shot in an ambiguous way: just prior
ues on the space station tells Chris (the hero) that it is perhaps time for him to return home. After a couple of Tarkovskian shots of green weeds in water, we then see Chris at his dacha reconciled with his father - however, the camera then slowly pulls back and upwards, and gradually it becomes clear that what we have just witnessed was probably not the actual return home but still a vision manufactured by Solaris: the dacha and the grass surrounding it appear as a lone island in the midst of the chaotic Solaris surface, as yet another materialized vision produced by it . . .
The same fantasmatic staging concludes Tarkovsky's Nostalgia: in the midst of the Italian countryside encircled by the fragments of a cathedral in ruins, i.e. in the midst of the place in which the hero is adrift, cut from his roots, there stands an element totally out of place, the Russian dacha, the stuff of the hero's dreams; here, also, the shot begins with a close up of only the recumbent hero in front of his dacha, so that, for a moment, it may seem as if he has effectively returned home; the camera then slowly pulls back to divulge the properly fantasmatic setting of the dacha in the midst of the Italian countryside. Since this scene follows the hero's successful accomplishment of the sacrificial-compulsive gesture of carrying the burning candle across the pool (after which he collapses and drops dead - or so we are led to believe), one is tempted to take the last shot of Nostalgia not only as the hero's dream, but as an uncanny scene which, since it follows his decease, stands for his death: the moment of the impossible combination of Italian countryside in which the hero is adrift with the object of his longing is the moment of death. (This deadly impossible synthesis is announced in a previous dream sequence in which Eugenia appears in a solidaric embrace with the hero's Russian maternal wife-figure.) What we have here is a phenomenon, a scene, a dream experience, which can no longer be subjectivized, i.e. a kind of non-subje
onger a dream of anyone, a dream which can emerge only after its subject ceases to be... This concluding fantasy is thus an artificial condensation of opposed, incompatible perspectives, somehow like the standard optician's test in which we see through one eye a cage, through the other eye a parrot, and, if our two eyes are well coordinated in their axes, when we open both eyes, we should see the parrot in the cage.(7)
Tarkovsky added not only this final scene, but also a new beginning: while the novel starts with Kelanvin's space travel to Solaris, the movie's first half hour takes place in the standard Tarkovskian Russian countryside, in which Kelvin takes a stroll, gets soaked by rain and immersed into humid earth... As we have already emphasized, in clear contrast to the film's fantasmatic resolution, the novel ends with the lone Kelvin contemplating the surface of Solaris, aware more than ever that he has encountered here an Otherness with which no contact is possible. The planet Solaris has thus to be conceived in strictly Kantian terms, as the impossible apparition of the Thought (the Thinking Substance) as a Thing-in-itself, a noumenal object. Crucial for the Solaris-Thing is thus the coincidence of utter Otherness with excessive, absolute proximity: the Solaris-Thing is even more "ourselves", our own inaccessible kernel, than the Unconscious, since it is an Otherness which directly "is" ourselves, staging the "objectively-subjective" fantasmatic core of our being. Communication with the Solaris-Thing thus fails not because Solaris is too alien, the harbinger of an Intellect infinitely surpassing our limited abilities, playing some perverse games with us whose rationale remains forever outside our grasp, but because it brings us too close to what, in ourselves, must remain at a distance if we are to sustain the consistency of our symbolic universe - in its very Otherness. Solaris generates spectral phenomena that obey our innermost idiosyncratic whims, i.e. if there is a stage-master who pulls the str
is, it is ourselves, "the Thing that thinks" in our heart. The fundamental lesson here is the opposition, antagonism even, between the big Other (the symbolic Order) and the Other qua Thing. The big Other is "barred", it is the virtual order of symbolic rules that provides the frame for communication, while in the Solaris-Thing, the big Other is no longer "barred", purely virtual; in it, the Symbolic collapses into the Real, language comes to exist as a Real Thing.
Tarkovsky's other science-fiction masterpiece, Stalker, provides the counterpoint to this all-too-present Thing: the void of a forbidden Zone. An anonymous bleak country, an area known as the Zone was visited 20 years before by some mysterious foreign entity (meteorite, aliens...) which left behind debris. People are supposed to disappear in this deadly Zone, which is isolated and guarded by army personnel. Stalkers are adventurous individuals who, for a proper payment, lead people to the Zone and to the mysterious Room at the heart of the Zone where your deepest wishes are allegedly granted. The film tells the story of one such stalker, an ordinary man with a wife and a crippled daughter with the magic capacity of moving objects, who takes to the Zone two intellectuals, a Writer and a Scientist. When they finally reach the Room, they fail to pronounce their wishes because of their lack of faith, while Stalker himself seems to receive an answer to his wish that his daughter would get better.
As in the case of Solaris, Tarkovsky inverses the point of a novel: in the Strugatsky brothers' novel The Roadside Picnic, on which the film is based, the Zones - there are six of them - are the debris of a "roadside picnic", i.e. of a short stay on our planet by some alien visitors who quickly left it, finding us uninteresting; Stalkers themselves are also presented in a more adventurous way, not as dedicated individuals on a tormenting spiritual search, but as deft scavengers organizing robbing expeditions, somehow like the proverbial Arabs organizing rai
(another Zone, for wealthy Westerners; are Pyramids not in effect, according to popular science literature, traces of an alien wisdom?). The Zone is thus not a purely mental fantasmatic space in which one encounters (or onto which one projects) the truth about oneself, but (like Solaris in Lem's novel) the material presence, the Real of an absolute Otherness incompatible with the rules and laws of our universe. (Because of this, at the novel's end, the hero himself, when confronted with the "Golden Sphere" - as the film's Room in which desires are realized is called in the novel -, does undergo a kind of spiritual conversion, but this experience is much closer to what Lacan called "subjective destitution", a sudden awareness of the utter meaningless of our social links, the dissolution of our attachment to reality itself - all of a sudden, other people are derealized, reality itself is experienced as a confused whirlpool of shapes and sounds, so that we are no longer able to formulate our desire...). In Stalker as well as in Solaris, Tarkovsky's "idealist mystification" is that he shrinks from confronting this radical Otherness of the meaningless Thing, reducing/retranslating the encounter with the Thing to the "inner journey" towards one's Truth. It is to this incompatibility between our own and the Alien universe that the novel's title refers: the strange objects found in the Zone which fascinate humans are in all probability simply the debris, the garbage, left behind after aliens have briefly stayed on our planet, comparable to the rubbish a group of humans leaves behind after a picnic in a forest near a main road... So the typical Tarkovskian landscape (of decaying human debris half reclaimed by nature) is in the novel precisely what characterizes the Zone itself from the (impossible) standpoint of the visiting aliens: what is to us a Miracle, an encounter with a wondrous universe beyond our grasp, is just everyday debris to the Aliens... Is it then, perhaps, possible to draw the Brechtian conclusion that t
ent in decay reclaimed by nature) involves a view of our universe from an imagined Alien standpoint? The picnic is thus here at the opposite extreme to that at the Hanging Rock: it is not us who encroach upon the Zone while on a Sunday picnic, it is the Zone itself which results from the Alien's picnic...
For a citizen of the defunct Soviet Union, the notion of a forbidden Zone gives rise to (at least) five associations: Zone is (1) Gulag, i.e. a separated prison territory; (2) a territory poisoned or otherwise rendered uninhabitable by some technological (biochemical, nuclear...) catastrophe, like Chernobyl; (3) the secluded domain in which the nomenklatura lives; (4) foreign territory to which access is prohibited (like the enclosed West Berlin in the midst of the GDR); (5) a territory where a meteorite struck (like Tunguska in Siberia). The point, of course, is that the question "So which is the true meaning of the Zone?" is false and misleading: the very indeterminacy of what lies beyond the Limit is primary, and different positive contents fill in this preceding gap.
Stalker perfectly exemplifies this paradoxical logic of the Limit which separates our everyday reality from the fantasmatic space. In Stalker, this fantasmatic space is the mysterious "zone", the forbidden territory in which the impossible occurs, in which secret desires are realized, in which one can find technological gadgets not yet invented in our everyday reality, etc. Only criminals and adventurers are ready to take the risk and enter this domain of fantasmatic Otherness. What one should insist on in a materialist reading of Tarkovsky is the constitutive role of the Limit itself: this mysterious Zone is effectively the same as our common reality; what confers on it the aura of mystery is the Limit itself, i.e. the fact that the Zone is designated as inaccessible, as prohibited. (No wonder that, when the heroes finally enter the mysterious Room, they become aware that there is nothing special or outstanding in it - the Stalker implo
the people outside the Zone, so that they do not lose their gratifying illusions...) In short, the obscurantist mystification consists here in the act of inverting the true order of causality: the Zone is not prohibited because it has certain properties which are "too strong" for our everyday sense of reality, it displays these properties because it is posited as prohibited. What comes first is the formal gesture of excluding a part of the real from our everyday reality and of proclaiming it the prohibited Zone. Or, to quote Tarkovsky himself: "I am often asked what does this Zone stand for. There is only one possible answer: the Zone doesn't exist. Stalker himself invented his Zone. He created it, so that he would be able to bring there some very unhappy persons and impose on them the idea of hope. The room of desires is equally Stalker's creation, yet another provocation in the face of the material world. This provocation, formed in Stalker's mind, corresponds to an act of faith".(8) Hegel emphasized that, in the suprasensible realm beyond the veil of appearances, there is nothing, just what the subject itself puts there when he takes a look at it...
In what, then, does the opposition between the Zone (in Stalker) and the planet Solaris consist? In Lacanian terms, of course, their opposition is easy to specify: it is the opposition between the two excesses, the excess of Stuff over symbolic network (the Thing for which there is no place in this network, which eludes its grasp), and the excess of an (empty) Place over stuff, over the elements which fill it in (the Zone is a pure structural void constituted/defined by a symbolic Barrier: beyond this barrier, in the Zone, there is nothing and/or exactly the same things as outside the Zone). This opposition stands for the opposition between drive and desire: Solaris is the Thing, the blind libido embodied, while the Zone is the void which sustains desire. This opposition also accounts for the different way the Zone and Solaris relate to the subject's libidinal
the "chamber of desires", the place in which, if the subject penetrates it, his desire-wish is fulfilled, while what the Thing-Solaris returns to subjects who approach it is not their desire but the traumatic kernel of their fantasy, the sinthom which encapsulates their relation to jouissance and which they resist in their daily lives.
The blockage in Stalker is thus opposed to the blockage in Solaris: in Stalker, the blockage concerns the impossibility (for us, corrupted, reflected, non-believing modern men) of achieving the state of pure belief, of desiring directly - the Room in the midst of the Zone has to remain empty; when you enter it, you are not able to formulate your wish. In contrast to it, the problem of Solaris is over-satisfaction: your wishes are realized/materialized before you even think of them. In Stalker, you never arrive at, reach, the level of pure, innocent wish/belief, while in Solaris, your dreams/fantasies are realized in advance in the psychotic structure of the answer which precedes the question. For this reason, Stalker focuses on the problem of belief/faith: the Chamber does fulfill desires, but only to those who believe with direct immediacy - which is why, when the three adventurers finally reach the threshold of the room, they are afraid to enter it, since they are not sure what their true desires/wishes are (as one of them says, the problem with the Room is that it does not fulfill what you think you wish, but the effective wish of which you may be unaware). As such, Stalker points towards the basic problem of Tarkovsky's two last films, Nostalgia and Sacrifice: the problem of how, through what ordeal or sacrifice, might it be possible, today, to attain the innocence of pure belief. The hero of Sacrifice, Alexander, lives with his large family in a remote cottage in the Swedish countryside (another version of the very Russian dacha which obsesses Tarkovsky's heroes). The celebrations of his birthday are marred by the terrifying news that low-flying jet planes have signaled th
wers. In his despair, Alexander turns himself in prayer to God, offering him everything that is most precious to him to have the war not have happened at all. The war is "undone" and, at the film's end, Alexander, in a sacrificial gesture, burns his beloved cottage and is taken to a lunatic asylum...
This motif of a pure, senseless act that restores meaning to our terrestrial life is the focus of Tarkovsky's last two films, shot abroad; the act is both times accomplished by the same actor (Erland Josephson) who, as the old fool Domenico, burns himself publicly in Nostalgia, and as the hero of Sacrifice, burns his house, his most precious belonging, what is "in him more than himself". To this gesture of senseless sacrifice, one should give all the weight of an obsessional-neurotic compulsive act: if I accomplish THIS (sacrificial gesture), THE Catastrophy (in Sacrifice, literally the end of the world in an atomic war) will not occur or will be undone - the well-known compulsive gesture of "If I do not do this (jump two times over that stone, cross my hands in this way, etc.) something bad will occur". (The childish nature of this compulsion to sacrifice is clear in Nostalgia where the hero, following the injunction of the dead Domenico, crosses the half-dry pool with the burning candle in order to save the world...) As we know from psychoanalysis, this catastrophic X whose outbreak we fear is none other than jouissance itself.
Tarkovsky is well aware that a sacrifice, in order to work and to be efficient, must be in a way "meaningless", a gesture of "irrational", useless expenditure or ritual (like traversing the empty pool with a lit candle or burning one's own house); the idea is that only such a gesture of just "doing it" spontaneously, a gesture not covered by any rational consideration, can restore the immediate faith that will deliver us and heal us from the modern spiritual malaise. The Tarkovskian subject here literally offers his own castration (renunciation of reason and domination, voluntary red
ion to a senseless ritual) as the instrument to deliver the big Other: it is as if only by accomplishing an act which is totally senseless and "irrational" that the subject can save the deeper global Meaning of the universe as such.
One is even tempted here to formulate this Tarkovskian logic of the meaningless sacrifice in the terms of a Heideggerian inversion: the ultimate Meaning of sacrifice is the sacrifice of Meaning itself. The crucial point here is that the object sacrificed (burned) at the end of Sacrifice is the ultimate object of Tarkovskian fantasmatic space, the wooden dacha standing for the safety and authentic rural roots of the Home - for this reason alone, Sacrifice is appropriately Tarkovsky's last film. Does this mean that we encounter here nonetheless a kind of Tarkovskian "traversing of the fantasy", the renunciation to the central element whose magic appearance in the midst of the strange countryside (planet's surface, Italy) at the end of Solaris and Nostalgia provided the very formula of the final fantasmatic unity? No, because this renunciation is functionalized in the service of the big Other, as the redemptive act destined to restore spiritual Meaning to Life.
What elevates Tarkovsky above cheap religious obscurantism is the fact that he deprives this sacrificial act of any pathetic and solemn "greatness", rendering it as a bungled, ridiculous act (in Nostalgia, Domenico has difficulties in lighting the fire which will kill him, the passers-by ignore his body in flames; Sacrifice ends with a comic ballet of men from the infirmary running after the hero to take him to the asylum - the scene is shot as a children's game of catching). It would be all too simple to read this ridiculous and bungled aspect of the sacrifice as an indication of how it has to appear as such to everyday people immersed in their run of things and unable to appreciate the tragic greatness of the act. Rather, Tarkovsky follows here the long Russian tradition whose exemplary case is Dostoevsky's "idiot" from
pical that Tarkovsky, whose films are otherwise totally deprived of humor and jokes, reserves mockery and satire precisely for scenes depicting the most sacred gesture of supreme sacrifice (already the famous scene of Crucifixion in Andrei Roublev is shot in such a way: transposed into the Russian winter countryside, with bad actors playing it with ridiculous pathos, with tears flowing).(9) So, again, does this indicate that, to use Althusserian terms, there is a dimension in which Tarkovsky's cinematic texture undermines his own explicit ideological project, or at least introduces a distance towards it, renders visible its inherent impossibility and failure?
In Nostalgia, there is a scene which contains a Pascalean reference: in a church, Eugenia witnesses the procession of simple peasant women in honor of Madonna del Parto - they are addressing to the saint their plea to become mothers, i.e. their prayer concerns the fertility of their marriage. When the perplexed Eugenia, who admits that she is unable to comprehend the attraction of motherhood, asks the priest who also observes the procession how one becomes a believer, he answers: "You should begin by kneeling down" - a clear reference to Pascal's famous "Kneel down and that act will render you feeble-minded" (i.e. it will deprive you of false intellectual pride). (Interestingly, Eugenia tries, but stops half-way: she is unable even to perform the external gesture of kneeling.) Here we encounter the deadlock of the Tarkovskian hero: is it possible for today's intellectual (whose exemplary case is Gortchakov, the hero of Nostalgia), separated from naive spiritual certainty by the gap of nostalgia, to return to immediate religious immersion, to recapture its certainty by asphyxiating existential despair? In other words, does the need of unconditional Faith, its redemptive power, not lead to a typically modern result, to the decisionist act of formal Faith indifferent towards its particular content, i.e. to a kind of religious counterpoint of Schmittean poli
believe takes precedence over WHAT we believe in? Or, even worse, doesn't this logic of unconditional faith ultimately lead to the paradox of love exploited by the notorious Reverend Moon? As is well known, Reverend Moon arbitrarily chooses the conjugal partners for the unmarried members of his sect: legitimizing his decision by means of his privileged insight into the working of the divine Cosmic Order, he claims to be able to identify the mate who was predestined for me in the eternal Order of Things, and simply informs by letter a member of his sect who is the unknown person (as a rule from another part of the globe) he is to marry - Slovenes are thus marrying Koreans, Americans are marrying Indians, etc. The true miracle, of course, is that this bluff works: if there is an unconditional trust and faith, the contingent decision of an external authority can produce a loving couple connected by the most intimate passionate link - why? Since love is "blind", contingent, grounded in no clearly observable properties, that unfathomable je ne sais quoi which decides when am I to fall in love can also be totally externalized in the decision of an unfathomable authority.
So what is false in the Tarkovskian sacrifice? More fundamentally, what IS sacrifice? The most elementary notion of sacrifice relies on the notion of exchange: I offer to the Other something precious to me in order get back from the Other something even more vital to me (the "primitive" tribes sacrifice animals or even humans so that God will repay them by sending enough rainfall, military victory, etc.) The next, already more intricate level is to conceive sacrifice as a gesture which does not directly aim at some profitable exchange with the Other to whom we sacrifice: its more basic aim is rather to ascertain that there IS some Other out there who is able to reply (or not) to our sacrificial entreaties. Even if the Other does not grant my wish, I can at least be assured that there IS an Other who, maybe, next time will respond differently: the
ies that may befall me, is not a meaningless blind machinery, but a partner in a possible dialogue, so that even a catastrophic outcome is to be read as a meaningful response, not as a kingdom of blind chance. How, then, are sacrifice and the Thing related? The very title of Claude Lefort's essay on Orwell's 1984, "The Interposed Corps",(10) provides the clue to this link. Lefort focuses on the famous scene in which Winston is subjected to the rat-torture - why are rats so traumatic for poor Winston? The point is that they are clearly a fantasmatic stand-in for Winston himself (as a small child, Winston behaved like a rat, ransacking refuse dumps for remainders of food). So, when he desperately shouts "Do it to Julia!", he interposes a corps between himself and his fantasmatic kernel, and thus prevents being swallowed by the traumatic Ding... Therein consists the primordial sense of sacrifice: to interpose an object between ourselves and the Thing. Sacrifice is a stratagem enabling us to maintain a minimal distance towards the Thing. We can see, now, why the motif of the Id-Machine has to lead to the motif of sacrifice: insofar as the paradigmatic case of this Thing is the Id-Machine that directly materializes our desires, the ultimate aim of the sacrifice is, paradoxically, precisely to prevent the realization of our desires...
In other words, the aim of the sacrificial gesture is NOT to bring us close to the Thing, but to maintain and guarantee a proper distance towards it; in this sense, the notion of sacrifice is inherently ideological. Ideology is the narrative of "why did things go wrong", it objectivizes the primordial loss/impossibility, i.e. ideology translates the inherent impossibility into an external obstacle which can in principle be overcome (in contrast to the standard Marxist notion according to which ideology "eternalizes" and "absolutizes" contingent historical obstacles). So the key element of ideology is not only the image of the full Unity to be achieved, but, even more, the elaboration
at prevents its achievement - ideology sets in motion our social activity by giving rise to the illusion that, if only we were to get rid of Them (Jews, the class enemy...), everything would be OK... Against this background, one can measure the ideologico-critical impact of Kafka's The Trial or The Castle. The standard ideological procedure transposes an inherent impossibility into an external obstacle or prohibition (say, the Fascist dream of a harmonious social body is not inherently false - it will become reality once one eliminates Jews, who plot against it; or, in sexuality, I will be able fully to enjoy once the paternal prohibition is suspended). What Kafka achieves is to traverse the same path in the OPPOSITE direction, i.e. to (re)translate external obstacles/prohibition into inherent impossibility - in short, Kafka's achievement resides precisely in what the standard ideologico-critical gaze perceives as his ideological limitation and mystification, i.e. in his elevation of (the state bureaucracy as) a positive social institution that prevents us, concrete individuals, from becoming free, into a metaphysical Limit that cannot ever be overcome.
What nonetheless redeems Tarkovsky is his cinematic materialism, the direct physical impact of the texture of his films: this texture renders a stance of Gelassenheit, of pacified disengagement that suspends the very urgency of any kind of Quest. What pervades Tarkovsky's films is the heavy gravity of Earth that seems to exert its pressure on time itself, generating an effect of temporal anamorphosis that extends time well beyond what we perceive as justified by the requirements of narrative movement (one should confer here on the term "Earth" all the resonance it acquired in the late Heidegger) - perhaps, Tarkovsky is the clearest example of what Deleuze called the time-image replacing the movement-image. This time of the Real is neither the symbolic time of the diegetic space nor the time of the reality of our (the spectator's) viewing the film, but an inter
erhaps the protracted stains which "are" the yellow sky in late van Gogh or the water or grass in Munch: this uncanny "massiveness" pertains neither to the direct materiality of the color stains nor to the materiality of the depicted objects - it dwells in the kind of intermediate spectral domain of what Schelling called "geistige Koerperlichkeit", spiritual corporeality. From the Lacanian perspective, it is easy to identify this "spiritual corporeality" as materialized jouissance, "jouissance which turned into flesh".
This inert insistence of time as Real, rendered paradigmatically in Tarkovsky's famous five minute slow tracking or crane shots, is what makes Tarkovsky so interesting for a materialist reading: without this inert texture, he would be just another Russian religious obscurantist. That is to say, in our standard ideological tradition, the approach to Spirit is perceived as Elevation, as getting rid of the burden of weight, of the gravitating force which binds us to earth, as cutting links with material inertia and starting to "float freely"; in contrast to this, in Tarkovsky's universe, we enter the spiritual dimension only via intense direct physical contact with the humid heaviness of earth (or stale water) - the ultimate Tarkovskian spiritual experience takes place when a subject is lying stretched out on the earth's surface, half submerged in stale water; Tarkovsy's heroes do not pray on their knees, with their heads turned upwards, towards heaven; instead they listen intensely to the silent palpitation of the humid earth... One can see, now, why Lem's novel had to exert such an attraction on Tarkovsky: the planet Solaris seems to provide the ultimate embodiment of the Tarkovskian notion of a heavy humid stuff (earth) which, far from functioning as the opposite of spirituality, serves as its very medium; this gigantic "material Thing which thinks" literally gives body to the direct coincidence of Matter and Spirit. In a homologous way, Tarkovsky displaces the common notion of dreaming, of ent
e subject enters the domain of dreams not when he loses contact with the sensual material reality around him, but, on the contrary, when he abandons the hold of his intellect and engages in an intense relationship with material reality. The typical stance of the Tarkovskian hero on the threshold of a dream is to be on the lookout for something, with the attention of his senses fully focused; then, all of a sudden, as if through a magic transsubstantiation, this most intense contact with material reality changes it into a dreamscape.(11) One is thus tempted to claim that Tarkovsky stands for the attempt, perhaps unique in the history of cinema, to develop the attitude of a materialist theology, a deep spiritual stance which draws its strength from its very abandonment of intellect and from an immersion in material reality.
If Stalker is Tarkovsky's masterpiece, it is above all because of the direct physical impact of its texture: the physical background (what T.S.Eliot would have called the objective correlative) to its metaphysical quest, the landscape of the Zone, is a post-industrial wasteland with wild vegetation growing over abandoned factories, concrete tunnels and railroads full of stale water, and wild overgrowth in which stray cats and dogs wander. Nature and industrial civilization here again overlap, through their common decay - civilization in decay is in the process of again being reclaimed (not by idealized harmonious Nature, but) by nature in decomposition. The ultimate Tarkovskian landscape is that of a humid nature, river or pool close to some forest, full of the debris of human artifices (old concrete blocks or pieces of rotten metal). The actors' faces themselves, especially Stalker's, are unique in their blend of ordinary ruggedness, small wounds, dark or white spots and other signs of decay, as if they were all exposed to some poisonous chemical or radioactive substance, as well as irradiating a fundamental naive goodness and trust.
Here we can see the different effects of censorship:
no less stringent than the infamous Hayes Production Code in Hollywood, it nonetheless allowed a movie so bleak in its visual material that it would never pass the Production Code test. Recall, as an example of Hollywood material censorship, the representation of dying from an illness in The Dark Victory with Bette Davis: upper-middle class surroundings, painless death... the process is deprived of its material inertia and transubstantiated in an ethereal reality free of bad smells and tastes. It was the same with slums - recall Goldwyn's famous quip when a reviewer complained that slums in one of his films look too nice, without real dirt: "They better look nice, since they cost us so much!" Hayes Office censorship was extremely sensitive to this point: when slums were depicted, it explicitly demanded that the set of the slum be constructed so that it not evoke real dirt and bad smell. At the most elementary level of the sensuous materiality of the real, censorship was thus much stronger in Hollywood than in the Soviet Union.
Tarkovsky is to be opposed here to the ultimate American paranoiac fantasy, that of an individual living in a small idyllic Californian city, a consumer paradise, who suddenly starts to suspect that the world he lives in is a fake, a spectacle staged to convince him that he lives in a real world, while all the people around him are effectively actors and extras in a gigantic show. The most recent example of this is Peter Weir's The Truman Show (1998), with Jim Carrey playing the small town clerk who gradually discovers the truth that he is the hero of a 24-hours permanent TV show: his hometown is constructed on a gigantic studio set, with cameras following him permanently. Among the predecessors of The Truman Show, it is worth mentioning Phillip Dick's Time Out of Joint (1959), in which a hero living a modest daily life in a small idyllic Californian city of the late 50s, gradually discovers that the whole town is a fake staged to keep him satisfied... The underlying experience of Time
the late capitalist consumerist Californian paradise is, in its very hyper-reality, in a way IRREAL, substance-less, deprived of material inertia. So it is not only that Hollywood stages a semblance of real life deprived of the weight and inertia of materiality ­ in late capitalist consumer society, "real social life" itself somehow acquires the features of a staged fake, with our neighbors behaving in "real" life like stage actors and extras... Again, the ultimate truth of the capitalist utilitarian de-spiritualized universe is the de-materialization of "real life" itself, its reversal into a spectral show.
It is only now that we confront the crucial dilemma of any interpretation of Tarkovsky's films: is there a distance between his ideological project (of sustaining Meaning, of generating a new spirituality through an act of meaningless sacrifice) and his cinematic materialism? Does his cinematic materialism effectively provide the adequate "objective correlative" for his narrative of spiritual quest and sacrifice, or does it secretly subvert this narrative? There are, of course, good arguments for the first option: in the long obscurantist-spiritualist tradition reaching up to the figure of Yoda in Lucas's The Empire Strikes Back, the wise dwarf who lives in a dark swamp, rotting nature in decay is posited as the "objective correlative" of spiritual wisdom (the wise man accepts nature the way it is, renouncing all attempts at aggressive domination and exploitation, any imposition of artificial order upon it...). On the other hand, what happens if we read Tarkovsky's cinematic materialism as it were in the opposite direction, what if we interpret the Tarkovskian sacrificial gesture as the very elementary ideological operation of overcoming the unbearable Otherness of meaningless cosmic contingency through a gesture that is itself excessively meaningless? This dilemma is discernible down to the ambiguous way in which Tarkovsky uses the natural sounds of the environs(12); their status is ontologically undeci
the "spontaneous" texture of non-intentional natural sounds, and simultaneously already somehow "musical", displaying a deeper spiritual structuring principle. It seems as if Nature itself miraculously starts to speak, the confused and chaotic symphony of its murmurs imperceptibly passing over into Music proper. These magic moments, in which Nature itself seems to coincide with art, lend themselves, of course, to the obscurantist reading (the mystical Art of Spirit discernible in Nature itself), but also to the opposite, materialist reading (the genesis of Meaning out of natural contingency).(13)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) See Chapter XVIII of Jacques Lacan, The Ethics of Psychoanalysis, London: Routledge 1992.
(2) Judith Butler, The Psychic Life of Power, Stanford: Stanford University Press 1997, p. 47.
(3) Stanislaw Lem, Solaris, New York: Harcourt, Brace & Company 1978, p. 30.
(4) The formula of Tonya Howe (University of Michigan, Ann Arbor) on whose excellent seminar paper "Solaris and the Obscenity of Presence" I rely here.
(5) See Jacques-Alain Miller, "Des semblants dans la relation entre les sexes", in La Cause freudienne 36, Paris 1997, p. 7-15.
(6) Quoted from Antoine de Vaecque, Andrei Tarkovski, Cahiers du Cinema 1989, p. 108.
(7) Is not the exemplary case of such a fantasmatic formation combining heterogeneous and inconsistent elements the mythical Kingdom (or Dukedom) of Ruritania, situated in an imaginary Eastern European space combining Catholic central Europe with the Balkans, the Central European noble feudal conservative tradition with the Balkan wilderness, modernity (train) with primitive peasantry, the "primitive" wilderness of Montenegro with the "civilized" Czech space (examples abound, from the notorious Prisoner of Zenda onwards)?
(8) de Vaecque, op.cit., p. 110.
(9) See de Vaecque, op.cit., p. 98.
(10) See Claude Lefort, Écrire. A l'epreuve du politique, Paris: Calmann-Levy 1992, p. 32-33.
(1
. 81.
(12) I rely here on Michel Chion, Le son, Paris: Editions Nathan 1998, p. 191.
(13) Therein resides also the ambiguity of the role of chance in Kieslowski's universe: does it point towards a deeper Fate secretly regulating our lives, or is the notion of Fate itself a desperate stratagem to cope with the utter contingency of life?

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Friday, April 3, 2009

洪堡的礼物

一。读英文才能体会到他简短句子里平静的忧伤。
二。在高贵和神圣都被击得粉碎,我们慌乱的拼凑昔日的完美图景之时,Leo Strauss与Karl Marx,也都是最亲密的战友。
三。更让人感到心碎的,不是“更多的人死于心碎”,而是越来越多的人已经不知心碎了。

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

回点名~

孤鸿同学的点名:

1.你的理想对象是什么样子?
善良,聪明,能心有灵犀。

2.你最希望自己喜欢的人为你做什么?
用心做的每一件事儿啊。

3.下辈子希望做男人还是女人?
不想有下辈子。

4. 你觉得我坚强吗?~
坚强....

5.受不了怎样的男(女)生?
虚伪,无聊,庸俗,夸夸其谈,自以为是。

6.你郁闷的时候怎么度过?
狂吃,狂睡,狂买东西。

7.你觉得我是一个怎样的人啊?
外表低调,但其实是个很独特的人(你都说了你也这样:-)

8.你对我的评价是?
同上一题。

9.毕业后的第一份工资先会用来干什么?
请客吃饭。

10.你有什么话想对我说吗?
有志不在身高.....

11.你真正的朋友应该是什么样子的?
有共同语言,默契,平时也许不常联系,但在对方遇到困境时一定能够be there。(完全一样...)

12.什么时候想起我?
上豆瓣的时候…

13.觉得恋人的身高重要么?
不重要。

14.你最爱吃的3样东西是什么?
羊肉泡、肉夹馍、凉皮。

15.你觉得怎样才算忘记了一个人?
忘了已经忘了他/她。

16.最喜欢做的事
吃喝玩乐,看书听碟看电影,扯淡。

17.你是否想成为丁克一族(不想要孩子的,夫妻都有收入的家庭)?
不能独身,就要丁克。坚决不要孩子。
 
18. 你能为你爱的人付出多少?女生们能陪着老公看你不爱看的足球么? 男生们愿意陪着老婆去逛他从来不爱逛的商店么?

不逛。这根爱不爱没多大关系。

19.如果你在路上捡到一个皮夹,皮夹里有200块,你会找你朋友吃饭,或者和你的心上人一起过2人生活,或者干脆一起请,又或者默不作声?

默不作声地交给警察叔叔…
 
20. 你曾经想过的最邪恶的念头是什么?
没有最邪恶,只有更邪恶。

21.突然听说我结婚了,你会什么反应?
祝贺。

22.一个人的时候第一个想起谁?
confidential.

23. 最近一次哭是为什么啊?
看电影吧,忘了什么电影了。

24.目前为止,最后悔的一件事情是什么?如果再有一次机会,你会怎么做?
高中没学文科;高中学文科。

25.觉得自己可以吸引异性的最大优点是什么诶?
没觉得....

26.最满意自己五官的哪里?最不满意自己五官的哪里?
鼻子;眼睛

27.如果遇到一个你喜欢的男生或女生,也许就在大街上,你有什么反应?
没反应。

28.你最向往到的地方...和谁..?
雅典...一个人

29.你喜欢四个季节中的哪一个?为什么?
春天;可以思春。

30.她/他如果喜欢别人,你会怎么办?
不怎么办啊,随她去吧。

31.你觉得我的他会是怎样的?
有思想,爱自由,有趣,敢爱敢恨,敢做敢当。

32.你现在最想干什么?
回家...

33.你最喜欢的东西丢了怎么办?
找回来,找不回来就算了。

34.你答了这么多题,觉得累不?
还行,一口气答下来的。

35.如果让你自杀你准备怎么个死法?(具体点)
用枪,这样会面目全非。

36.晚上几点睡觉?
2点。

37.你喜欢的人对你很好,可你们也不是你男/女朋友,他/她也不拒绝你,你会怎么办?
追她啊。

38.哪天我一无所有了,你会帮我吗?(be honest)
会。

39.爱情、友情、事业,哪个最重要?
事业、爱情、友情。

40. 想成为世界上有名的人吗?
不想。
 
41.送句祝福给我吧:
祝你能找到合适的男友~

42.最想得到哈利波特的什么魔法或什么技能?
隐身衣。

43. 说个最近夜里做的梦来听听
自杀。。。

44.如果让你必须丢失身体的某一部分或者丧失一种能力,你愿意丧失哪一种?
大脑。。失忆。。

45. 许个愿吧
(愿望不说才能实现)

46.在谈恋爱吗?
half half.

47.最感动的一件事情(不管是谁为你做的)
忘了。。。

48.你觉得精神重要还是物质?
精神

49.你会不会很容易喜欢上一个人?
会...

50.如果现在还和中国古代一样,是一夫多妻制,你将怎样?
就那样来呗。(中国古代不是一妻多夫啊)

Sunday, November 30, 2008

《论扯淡》

《论扯淡》(On Bullshit)是普林斯顿大学前哲学系主任Harry G.Frankfurt二十五年前由于在耶鲁大学“目睹学术界之怪现状”之后感到非常不爽,愤愤然写了一篇随笔,只有1万多字,而且也还是没有摆脱学术论文的架势,前几年才出版,不过竟然一跃为非虚构类(non-fiction)的best-seller,估计销量中不少要归于他的“标题党”行径(嗯...我怀疑说不定有人把on都会理解为“上”...)。


我觉得,他所说的扯淡其实要分为两类,第一类是“日常生活的扯淡”,以他书中为例,每年7月4日美国国庆时候演讲者的话:

   “Our great and blessed country,whose founding fathers under divine guidance created a new beginning for mankind.”(我们伟大天佑的祖国啊,它的建国之父们在神的引领下为人类创造了新的开端。)


这不是谎话,演讲者并不认为他在说一个他自认为错误的事情。但是演讲者并不关心听众们从中得到任何关于美国历史及建国之父的知识——演讲者关心的是他所摆出的这个“爱国pose”,以及听众对他这个“爱国pose”的反应。


其实还有一个更常见的版本,在美国最常听到的对话无疑是下面这个了(Before Sunset里女主角拿这个开玩笑):

"Hey, how are you doing?"

"Great!How are you doing?"

"Great!"

问话的人真的在意对方“干”得怎么样么?还是说只想摆出这个“关心别人的pose”,或者说这已经成了话语霸权(霸权不好听,就叫“文化习俗”吧),见了面不说这个(或者直接问候人家母亲的How's your mother doing?),对方肯定会怀疑“您火星来的吧?”(直接问候老母的话,就会被打回火星)。这一类扯淡的危害是不大的,至少没有到“模糊真理”的程度。


但我觉得F老师的界定还是有些不严谨——尽管半本书都在界定何为扯淡——比如在我看来,哈维尔《无权者的权力》里的这段:

  

『某个水果店经理在洋葱、胡萝卜陈列橱窗上贴了一幅标语:“全世界无产者,联合起来! ”他这样做目的何在?究竟向人们传送什么信息?他是否对全世界无产者的大联合真的十分热衷? 他当真觉得他的热情促使他非得让公众都来了解他的理想不可?他是否真的想过,这个大联合该怎么实现,实现了又怎么样?我敢断言,大多数商店经理们对于橱窗上标语的意义从来是不会过问的。他们也不会用那样的标语来表达自己真实的意见。标语是上面批发洋葱和胡萝卜的同时发下来的。水果店经理拿过来往橱窗上一贴就完事了,因为这是习以为常,司空习惯的事情。但要是不贴,就会有麻烦。上面会指责他不按规定布置橱窗,有人甚至会控告他反///党反社会主义。为了过得下去,他非照章办事不可。这样的小事千千万万,做了才能有过上“与社会谐调一致”的生活保障。』


也是标准的“扯淡”——尽管大家都不信以为真(前面那两个例子是“大家都不觉得假”)。



第二类就是“学院派的扯淡”,这才是本书作者的用意所在,也就是“目睹学术界之怪现状”之由来——他在耶鲁那会儿,德里达老师(丫才是那个传说中的、用来形容星爷的“后现代解构主义大师”)正在那儿教书。一般人听到“后现代解构主义”这么一个不user-friendly的词,都会怒不可遏揭竿而起,更不用说当时在哲学系的F老师了。这类扯淡基本是这样的:


   『扯淡不是说谎,却是真理最大的敌人。因为说谎的人知道何者为真,却讲的是假话。而扯淡的人既不关心何者为真,也不关心何者为假,只在乎自身利益。这种认为无论事实真相如何都没有差别的态度,就是扯淡的本质。』


说的其实还是那一套:你们这些人哪!相对主义泛滥啊!价值观混乱啊!

其实一点儿不新鲜——柏拉图对智者派(sophists)就这么批评的(见《泰阿泰德篇》和《普罗泰戈拉篇》)。


普罗泰戈拉老师提出的著名观点是“人是万物的尺度”,他对神是这么想的:“至于神,我没有把握说他们存在或者他们不存在,也不敢说他们是什么样子;因为有许多事物妨碍了我们确切的知识,例如问题的晦涩与人生的短促。”因此也被雅典公民大会判决为不敬神,而被驱逐出雅典。


所以这本《论扯淡》的书,其实是在说对什么“逻各斯”、“世界精神”、“宇宙理性”、“道”和“上帝”的认识问题这样“终极的哲学问题”(认识的前提是存在,海德格尔说“存在是形而上学的最高命题”)——换句话说,这就是本瞎扯淡的书。


福柯在《疯癫与文明》开头引用的那句帕斯卡的话总让我心有戚戚焉:“人类必然会疯癫到这种地步,即不疯癫也只是另一种形式的疯癫。”——一本反对“扯淡”的书竟然这么扯淡,简直应该是“意料之外情理之中”了。


这种矛盾或者悖论没有问题——只要把前提设为对世界的否定。为什么不能认为世界其实是非理性的?为什么不能认为文明其实是在倒退的?为什么不能认为人生其实就是非常扯淡的?


也许只有用扯淡的态度,来面对扯淡的人生,才会让它显得不那么扯淡吧?

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

胡乱想想

古代中国哲学和古希腊哲学的重大区分就在,认识论和[说话的]逻辑(西哲所谓“逻格斯”logos,即希腊语“说话”的意思)一直都是西方哲学的重点,而在中国除了墨家和名家粗略地涉及到认识论和逻辑的问题外(如:公孙龙子之“坚白之辨”、“火不热”是认识论问题;“白马非马”是逻辑问题),就再也很难找到与之相关的论述了。

我想这其中与汉字是象形文字而希腊使用拼音文字是有很大的关系的。用英语举个例子,在说到公牛(bull)和奶牛(cow)的时候,从字形上看不出其中的任何联系与区别,因此不可避免的就要考虑一个(柏拉图所谓)“理念的”牛,使得bull和cow都分享这一“理念的”牛(也就是“共相”)的部分特征,也由此会涉及到词的阴性和阳性问题(阴性和阳性,不再作为一个“形容词”来描述“物”,而是用“词本身”来区分“物”)。汉字基本上就不会有这个问题,比如说到牛的时候,我们把这个字写出来,本身就已经为这个“物”下了定义(就是“牛”这个样子的),因此,便不会考虑到去找一个“理念的”牛来解决类似cow,bull如何统一的问题。(或者可以说,“牛”这个字本身,就已经是从经验中抽象出来的“理念”了,因此任何对这个“理念的牛”的描述,都不可能再成为一个“词本身”,而成了前缀或后缀或偏旁的形容词模式。比如,“犊”字和“牛”字发音完全不同,但看到字的时候就能知道两者是有联系的。)

所以说汉字是可以起到拼音文字所起不到的作用,就是在“能指”与“所指”之间起到桥梁的作用(可以不是很恰当的比作拉康所谓的“象征界”与“实在界”),而拼音文字就基本上只能在“能指”之间互相打转转了,虽然英文也有“词根”,但那些“词根”并不与真实的“所指”产生联系(其实也是有联系的,只不过这种联系基本上已经没用了。在《西方哲学史》的注里,有:希伯来字母的第三个字“gimel”指“骆驼”,而这个字的符号就是一幅约定俗成的骆驼图形。)。比如在英文里,你“指鹿为马(说deer的定义是四条腿,不长角,有鬃毛,尾巴像拂尘等等)”是没有任何问题的。但用中文的时候,人家一看“鹿”这个字,明明不像你所说得那样嘛,就会出问题。当然这个问题早有人注意到了,莱布尼茨和黑格尔都讨论过中文的“文、言不一致”的问题(俩人观点相反,莱布尼茨觉得中文这样很好很强大,黑格尔觉得不利于逻辑、很低级);福柯的《词与物》中探讨词和物的对应关系,也说是受了中文的启发(当然丫不识中文,从博尔赫斯的小说里才知道这一点。)

在新文化运动之后,废除汉字或汉字罗马化的问题是很多知识分子都提出的,比如鲁迅、胡适、赵元任、钱玄同等等(当然还有毛泽东)。当时的理由是汉字太难了,脱离了人民大众,成了统治阶级的工具,据鲁迅说,当时全国有80%的人是不识字的(见《且介亭杂文》有几篇讲废除汉字的)。虽然废除汉字在现在看来是相当激进的主张,但当时差不多已经成为了推动新文化运动的知识分子的共识,鲁迅的理由在当时其实已经相当温和了,其他,像钱玄同的理由,就是为了让以后中国人读不了古书(因为他觉得古书都是妖言惑众)。

原来我对废除汉字的态度是不支持也不反对。但是现在觉得汉字之联系“能指”和“所指”的作用,对于防止思想控制还是有一定作用的。况且现在中国的15岁以上识字率已经超过90%(这一点共产党做得不错),鲁迅的理由也不成立了。所以现在我觉得应该是要反对废除汉字的。

关于语言对思想的控制作用,越来越多地被人们意识到了,特别是二战后的结合语言学的结构主义哲学家们。之前奥威尔的《一九八四》里特别讲了关于大洋国的“新话”,虽然是对苏联comintern的讽刺,但它也触及到的日常语言如何控制人们思想的问题。

说到近代中国最被扭曲的词,“封建”无疑是其中之一了。这个词是日本人翻译欧洲中世纪的社会制度feudalism的时候,采用了(主要是)西周制度的“封建”一词,进而又传入中国的。后来作为马克思主义的意识形态,被大肆使用,这里是郭沫若证明了中国也是同样经过了“奴隶制”、“封建制”的社会转变,从而把“封建”一词的原意彻底与真正的西周“封建制度”脱离开了(西周仍是“奴隶制”)。我怀疑正是这个“功绩”,才让郭沫若坐上了左联第二把交椅(所谓鲁郭茅巴老曹)。好像研究前三代历史的学者杜正胜(哈哈,没错,就是那个“罄竹难书”的杜正胜)一直试图否定郭沫若的这个马克思主义历史观。

顺便说到了马克思,马克思的历史主义和黑格尔是一脉相承的,只不过是把黑格尔唯心的绝对精神,换成了唯物的生产关系。反对这一方法论的就是所谓的“个人主义方法论”,其中有奥地利学派(哈耶克为代表)在经济学上,就反对德国经济学上的“历史主义”(然后被德国人蔑称为“奥地利学派”,他们这一派强调经济学是以单个理性经济人为研究基础,社会的经济学就是这些个人的集合);还有就是波普尔,他专门写过一本《历史决定论的贫困》来反对马克思式的历史主义,这和他的“批判理性主义”也是一致的,基本上就是说,使用“归纳法”所得到的结果,在受到理性批判之前是不能作为新知识的。不过还是罗素对黑格尔的“历史哲学”的讽刺让人印象深刻:
“奇怪的是,一种被说成是宇宙性的历程竟然全部发生在我们这个星球上,而且大部分是在地中海附近。并且,假若“实在”是无时间性的,也没有任何理由说这历程后来的部分要比在前的部分体现较高的范畴——除非人当真要采取这样一种亵渎不敬的假定:宇宙渐渐在学习黑格尔的哲学。”(《西方哲学史》)

马克思的问题也是在这儿,他的研究所基于的历史差不多就只集中在地中海附近。“封建”一词在中国被当作同马克思的“封建”同样意思不超过100年,而真正的实行“封建制度”的西周,却反而成了“奴隶制”。打破“封建制”,实行“郡县制”的秦朝,反而成了“封建社会”的起始。更进一步,本来只作为表示行政制度的“封建”一词,成了“反动”、“落后”和“黑暗”的同义词。

如果在拼音文字中,直接将“封建”定义为“反动、落后”,那么就会出现“指鹿为马”一样的现象,人们是无从了解其中区别的。但是作为汉字来看,“封”是像一只手在种树的样子(金文:http://www.zdic.net/zd/zi/ZdicE5ZdicB0Zdic81.htm)古人通过种树来划分疆界。“建”中的聿,样子是笔,也引申指文书。只要从形象上判断,也差不多能猜到这只是一个地域区分的问题,和“反动、落后”是怎么也联系不上的。因此在这一点上,汉字在阻止类似试图将“封建”与“落后”画等号这一行为上,比起拼音文字是有极大优势的。

Friday, October 24, 2008

疯狂约会美丽都

1.纬二街上有一家American Standard,中学六年每次上学骑车路过的时候,都会扭过头去盯着那两个白色单词看很久。

2.辜鸿铭比较过中、美、英、法、德,五国人的性格,说只有法国人和中国人最像,有敏感,深沉,博大和纯朴这几种特征。哦对了,他还说,“中国人过着一种孩子般的生活,一种心灵的生活”。

3.我看希波克拉底的时候总在想,能看到骨骼、肌肉和血管有啥了不起的,倒是《黄帝内经》能想出像经络、穴位这些似有似无的东西更神奇呢。

4.柏拉图的理想国里要驱逐诗人,波普尔觉得丫就是极权思想、封闭社会的始作俑者。可是可是,在我们现在所谓的开放社会中,诗人难道没有被驱逐么?他们早都饿死了呀。

5.《疯狂约会美丽都》就是一部法国人拍的动画片,它把纽约称为Belleville,其实就是Brave New World的“美丽”,Metropolitan的“都”。

6.我发现Eaton Center下面吃饭的那里,越来越多的店家开始边做边卖了。也就是说您在买饭的时候能够看到他整个的制作过程。我就想,资本主义发展到这一步真不容易,不仅人被异化了,连饭都被异化了。

7.《疯狂约会美丽都》在这一点上表现的就不够彻底,汉堡包居然还是由服务员给您端过来的。这已经是太人性了,虽然后来那个服务员说“no money,no burger.”

8.不过话说回来,我前几天重看托克维尔《美国的民主》在讲美国民情的时候,觉得我们完全在两个不同的世界。现代的洪流真是浩浩荡荡。

9.在这一点上,我就觉得《疯狂约会美丽都》这个中文名要比原来Les Triplettes de Belleville(美丽都三姐妹)深刻得多了,我们世界已然疯狂。

10.不过说到是不是约会,这事儿还得好好说说清楚。

11.在伍迪·艾伦的《赛末点》里,男主角说:索福克勒斯说过,从未出生才是最幸福的事情。我想这位古希腊悲剧作家算是体会到人生最大的悲剧了。而且,人生的痛苦不正是因为当初(还是一枚精子的时候)太成功、战胜了其他亿万同胞么?怎么人们还要追求成功呢?

12.这时候我就又想到伍迪·艾伦在Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex最后扮演的那个愁眉苦脸、苦大愁深的精子了。

13.罗素对欧陆哲学颇有偏见,觉得卢梭和德国唯心论是浪漫主义和极权主义的起源,只有他们英国的经验主义很好很强大。但是以赛亚·柏林在《浪漫主义的根源》里就说,其实休谟的怀疑论也是浪漫主义的重要来源。我觉得柏林说的在理。

14.但想来想去我为什么总是支持左翼呢。估计是这样:右翼说政府少干预能激励个人奋斗,说的是不错的,但衡量的标准就差不多是GDP或钱,艺术在这个过程中的价值就无法体现出来,如果政府再不提供基本社会保障,大部分艺术家就差不多只有转行和饿死这两条路了。

15.在《斯巴达克思》这电影里,斯巴达克思起义之后,队伍里还有个诗人,战士们都觉得打仗带个诗人干嘛?又没战斗力。斯巴达克思教育战士们:我们打仗的目的就是能有一个朗诵诗歌的环境。

16.如果斯巴达克思不这么想,那么战士们为了让诗人别浪费粮食,很可能会让他滚蛋。更极端一点,如果队伍里缺粮,那么战士们说不定会把他吃了。枪花有首歌叫《Welcome to the jungle》,这就是我猜想的终极右翼社会,完全的丛林法则、弱肉强食。赫鲁晓夫说:“脑袋都要掉了,还要原则干嘛?”与这个喜欢拿皮鞋乱敲的人不同,我想有些原则可能真的比脑袋重要。

17.这电影很长,但我现在几乎只能记住这一段,估计就如费希特所说:“选择什么样的哲学,就说明你是个什么样的人。”对电影哪一段印象最深刻,某种程度上也就说明了你什么类型的人。

18.回到动画片《疯狂约会美丽都》,他是对美国标准的嘲讽。纽约的肮脏和混乱其实到还在其次,对我来说,纽约对街道的命名方法才真正让人忍无可忍,抓狂到不行:南北方向的依次叫做第一大道、第二大道、第三大道……,东西方向的依次叫做:第一街、第二街、第三街……这种没有一丁点儿浪漫和想像力的事情,也许只有实用主义、工具理性的美国人才干得出来。

19.其实这种工具理性不仅仅体现在纽约对街道的命名方式而已。看看他们对论文范式的要求就知道那是多么的恶心了。那天又看《道德经》,看到“绝圣弃智”和“民至老死,不相往来”的时候突然十分感伤:我终归是无可奈何地被卷入理性的洪流中,再也无法回头了。

20.如果说世界是列火车,过去的100多年里的火车头美国拖着世界轰隆隆地冲到了现代,很多人都在挤破头抢着去火车头里给发动机拼命地填煤,可是,我们这究竟是要去哪儿呢?所谓的美国标准,他有没有可能其实是像American Standard一样……只是个马桶而已?

21.在《疯狂约会美丽都》最后,已经白发苍苍的孙子对着旁边的空位说:“奶奶,电视节目结束了。”

Saturday, October 4, 2008

死亡诗社

豆瓣一直猜我喜欢,今天才看。

其实觉得还一般了,但最后居然还是不争气的哭鸟~~
以下为离散感想:

1.那个演Todd的就是《爱在黎明破晓前》和《爱在日落黄昏前》的Jess啊,这电影里完全是个正太么...

2.我觉得用Todd这名字当英文名不错,理由如下:
a)以T开头
b)可以分开写成To DD,给弟弟,可以装纯
c)tod有机灵的人的意思,加个d表示过去式,我也发现我是过去机灵现在愚钝
d)实在混不下去可以找个孙二娘开人肉包子店。

3.那老师的名字叫Keating,我怀疑是Keats的现在进行时啊。

4.Keating出场的时候吹的口哨,前两段是老柴的1812序曲最后俄国人民欢庆胜利时候的高潮部分,也就是V字仇杀队里国会大楼被炸的时候那段儿,中间那点儿没听出来,快出门的时候吹的是国际歌里“英特那熊哪儿”这句。

5.当我意识到居然连这都能听出来的时候,心里面一个声音说:你真牛逼啊。我想了想,不得不同意他。

6.我最喜欢里面的Charlie,但现在一想到这名字第一个声音就是“Charlie bit me...”然后就很想笑。很过分的是,Shall I compare thee to a summer's day是我最喜欢的一首莎士比亚的sonnet(I prefer autumn's day tho),居然被他说成是他自己写的。

7.我觉得这电影就只是一个“小规模的浪漫主义起义”,当然如果算上Neil自杀的话也可以勉强称之为“武装起义”。简单地说,当你给浪漫主义这件事取“浪漫主义”这个名字的时候,这件事就已经不那么浪漫了。

8.其实从亚里士多德开始就已经用理性来规范艺术了,在他的理性的三个层次里,诗学也是其中之一:纯粹理性(形而上学,逻辑,数学),实践理性(物理,政治,伦理)和创造理性(诗学,修辞学)。在他的《诗学》里就已经根据普遍性原理给悲剧和史诗分了高下,说实话,这和那位用“阴影面积法”计算莎士比亚和拜伦的十四行孰好孰坏的PhD也没多大区别了。

9.理性和情感一直,从荷马对巴库斯就开始,都是西方冲突的主题,近代比较重要的比如十八、十九世纪的浪漫主义运动,二战后的解构主义,在冲突下面实际的线索还是理性的。真正的非理性是倒是东方的神秘主义,他不是对理性的反动,而是对理性的不理不问甚至不知道有这个东西。

10.所以里面Keating引用Robert Forst的话“树林中有两条路,而我选了那条较少人走的路,这就造成了所有的不同。”是我小时候很喜欢的,但现在越来越觉得,两条路分明是殊途同归,就是黑格尔的“正-反-合”。

11.我觉得在任何真正审美的意义上,我都是中国式的。在青山秀水旁曲径通幽的小宅院,显然要比希腊罗马那些五大三粗的傻不愣噔杵在城市广场的建筑美的多。黑白两色的水墨画也要比任何除了印象派之外的西方画作更有感觉。中国诗也要比动辄上万句的西方史诗有情调多了。我真是觉得没有比这更恰当的爱国主义了。